Re: [PATCH 0/2] Infrastructure to allow fixing exec deadlocks

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 




On 3/5/20 10:14 PM, Eric W. Biederman wrote:
> 
> Bernd, everyone
> 
> This is how I think the infrastructure change should look that makes way
> for fixing this issue.
> 
> - Correct the point of no return.
> - Add a new mutex to replace cred_guard_mutex
> 
> Then I think it is just going through the existing
> users of cred_guard_mutex and fixing them to use the new one.
> 
> There really aren't that many users of cred_guard_mutex so we should be
> able to get through the easy ones fairly quickly.  And anything that
> isn't easy we can wait until we have a good fix.
> 
> The users of cred_guard_mutex that I saw were:
>     fs/proc/base.c:
>        proc_pid_attr_write
>        do_io_accounting
>        proc_pid_stack
>        proc_pid_syscall
>        proc_pid_personality
>     
>     perf_event_open
>     mm_access
>     kcmp
>     pidfd_fget
>     seccomp_set_mode_filter
> 
> Bernd does this make sense to you?  
> 
> I think we can fix the seccomp/no_new_privs issue with some careful
> refactoring.  We can probably do the same for ptrace but that appears
> to need a little lsm bug fixing.
> 

Yes, for most functions the proposed "exec_update_mutex" is fine,
but we will need a longer-time block for ptrace_attach, seccomp_set_mode_filter
and proc_pid_attr_write need to be blocked for the whole exec duration so
they need a second "mutex", with deadlock-detection as in my previous patch,
if I see that right.

Unfortunately only one of the two test cases can be fixed without the
second mutex, of course the mm_access is what cause the practical problem.

Currently for the unlimited user space delay, I have only the case of
a ptraced sibling thread on my radar, de_thread waits for the parent
to call wait in this case, that can literally take forever.
But I know that also PTRACE_CONT may be needed after a PTRACE_EVENT_EXIT.

Can you explain what else in the user space can go wrong to make an
unlimited delay in the execve?


Bernd.



[Index of Archives]     [Linux USB Devel]     [Video for Linux]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Yosemite News]     [Linux Kernel]     [Linux SCSI]

  Powered by Linux